File: 
<oilwax.htm>                                                                                                                                                   <Economic Plants
Index>         <Main Botany Menu>          <Home>
 
 
Fatty Oils & Waxes
                   (Contacts)
 
Please CLICK on Underlined Categories to view:
 [ to search for Subject Matter, depress Ctrl/F ]:
 
          The terminology used
here to describe the various kinds of oils and waxes
 reflects their physical rather than chemical characteristics
  
===========================================================================
 
|             Fatty oils are fixed oils because
  they do not evaporate or become volatile. 
  They cannot be distilled without being decomposed.  Chemically fatty oils are close to animal
  fats.  They contain glycerin in
  combination with a fatty acid.  They
  are liquid at room temperature and usually contain oleic acid.  However, fats are solid at room
  temperature and contain palmitic or stearic acid.  Fatty oils are insoluble in water but soluble in several
  organic solvents.  Breakdown products
  of fats are fatty acids and glycerin accompanied by a rancid odor and
  taste.  Boiling a fat with an alkali
  causes it to decompose and the fatty acid unites with the alkali to form soap.  The addition of lye or potash will make
  the soap softer, if soda is used a hard soap results.             Fatty oils occur in many plant
  families, both tropical and temperate. 
  They are stored, frequently in large amounts, in seeds and somewhat in
  fruits, tubers, stems and other plant organs.  They may also contain proteins.  This kind of reserve food material is available as a source of
  energy for the processes involved in seed germination.  Fatty oils are bland and lack the strong
  taste, odor and antiseptic qualities of essential oils.  Thus they are suitable for human
  food.  These edible oils contain both
  solid and liquid fats and form an important part of the human diet.               Extraction of fatty oils
  varies.  Usually the seed coats have to
  be removed and then the remainder is reduced to a fine meal.  The oils are removed by solvents or by
  subjecting the meal to hydraulic pressure. 
  The residue is rich in proteins and is valuable as an animal food and
  fertilizer.  Pressure causes the cell
  walls to break and the fats are released. 
  The extracted oils are filtered and may be further purified.  Higher grades are edible and lower grades
  are used in various industries.  Fatty
  oils may also have medicinal value.             Four classes
  of plant fatty oils are (1) drying oils, (2) semidrying oils, (3) nondrying
  oils, and (4) fats or tallows.  The
  drying oils can absorb oxygen and on exposure dry into thin elastic
  films.  These oils are importance in
  the paint and varnish industries. 
  Semidrying oils absorb oxygen slowly and only in small amounts.  They form a soft film only after long
  exposure to air.  Some are edible;
  others are used as illuminants or in making soap and candles.  The nondrying oils remain liquid at room
  temperature and do not form a film. 
  Such oils are edible and may be used for soap and lubricants.  The fats are solid or semisolid at room
  temperature.  They are edible and also
  useful in the manufacture of soap and candles.  Drying and semidrying oils are more common in plants of temperate
  climates, while nondrying oils and fats predominate in plants of tropical
  areas.                 Flax
  seed, Linum usitatissimum, has been the source of one of the most important of the
  drying oils.  The oil content is 32-43
  percent.  The seeds are collected and
  stored for several months.  Then
  impurities are removed and the seeds are ground to a fine meal.  The oil is usually extracted by pressure
  with heat or by the use of solvents. 
  Cold-pressed oil is produced in Eastern Europe where it is used for
  human consumption.  Linseed oil varies
  from yellow to brownish in color and has an acrid taste and smell.  It forms a tough elastic film when
  oxidized.  Heating the raw oil to 125
  deg. Centigrade increases this drying property.  This produces the “boiled” linseed oil.  Linseed oil has been used mainly in making
  paints, varnishes, linoleum, soft soap and printer’s ink.  Following extraction, the oil cake can be
  used as an animal feed.             Argentina has been the main
  producer, where over six million acres were devoted to seed-flax cultivation
  by the mid 1900’s.  Russia, India,
  China, Uruguay and Canada and the United States also produced considerably
  quantities.  Montana, the Dakotas and
  Minnesota were the centers of seed-flax production in the United States, with
  an annual yield of 40 million bu. by 1950.  
                 Tung
  oil, or Chinawood oil,
  has been widely used in the varnish industry and as a substitute for linseed
  oil.  It is obtained from the seeds of
  two Chinese species of Aleurites, A. fordii, the tung-oil tree, a species native to
  central and western China, and A. montana, the mu tree, found in southwestern China.  Oils from these trees are almost identical
  in composition and properties and imported tung oil is often a mixture of the
  two.  In China tung oil has been used
  for centuries in waterproofing wood, paper and fabrics.  It is a good preservative and is resistant
  to weathering, so it is especially valuable for painting outdoors.  Boatmen have sought after tung oil because
  it is little affected by water.             In the United States cultivation
  of A. fordii began in 1905 and grew to 75,000 acres in the Gulf States
  by the mid 1950’s.  Tung trees are
  handsome and are often planted as ornamentals.  The tung oil industry had assumed great importance in southern
  agriculture by the mid 1950’s.  Not
  only was it a profitable source of income, but also the orchards could be
  planted on otherwise useless eroded land.             The outer husk of the fruit is
  removed and the oil is expressed from the seeds by expeller presses.  Tung oil is pale yellow to dark brown and
  dries very rapidly and also has preservative and waterproofing qualities.  Consequently, its chief use has been in
  the varnish and paint industries, where it largely replaced kauri and other
  hard resins.  Large quantities were
  also used in producing linoleum, oilcloth, brake linings, soap, leather
  dressings, inks, insulating compounds and fiberboard.  The oil cake is a good fertilizer but is
  unsuitable as an animal feed.               Soybean,
  Glycine max,
  is native to China and has been a most important food plant in Eastern
  Asia.  The oil is midway between
  linseed and cottonseed in its characteristics, so that sometimes it is
  classified as a drying oil or semidrying oil.  The oil is extracted from the seeds by expression with
  hydraulic or expeller presses or by the use of solvents.  The oil content of improved varieties now
  exceeds 22 percent.  After refining,
  soybean oil has been widely used in salads or as cooking oil and for other
  food purposes.
   However, research in 2019 has
  associated autism with the consumption of soybean oil.  There ore many food products made from it,
  such as margarine, tofu, ice cream substitutes, vegetarian meat substitutes,
  etc.  It is also used in the manufacture
  of soap, candles, varnishes, lacquers, paints, linoleum, greases, rubber
  substitutes, cleaning compounds disinfectants and insecticides.  The oil cake or meal has a 40-48 percent
  protein content and is valuable as a meat substitute and feed for livestock.  It is also used for adhesives, plastics,
  foaming solutions, spreaders, fertilizers, sizings, synthetic textiles, etc.   <bot704> 
  Soybean seed (Glycine max Fab.) [China]               Seeds
  of large evergreen tree of northeast Brazil, Licania rigida, provide this
  oil.  It has been used as a substitute
  for tung oil.  It is extracted by
  solvents or by hydraulic presses. 
  This oil finds use in the paint and varnish industries; in making
  linoleum, printing inks and brake bands; and for improving the elasticity of
  rubber.  It has been used in Brazil as
  an illuminant and medicine.               The seeds of Perilla frutescens, an aromatic annual,
  3-5 ft. in height with numerous branches, provides this oil.  Native to northern India, China and Japan,
  it is extensively cultivated in the Orient, especially in Manchuria and
  Japan.  The plant matures slowly and
  must be harvested before it is completely ripe or the seeds will fall from
  their capsules.  The oil is expressed
  from roasted and crushed seeds and is edible, having been used for
  centuries.  Industrial uses of perilla
  oil are much more important.  It is
  deployed in the manufacture of Japanese oilpapers, cheap lacquer, paper
  umbrellas, waterproof clothes, printer’s ink and leather.  A considerable amount of this oil was
  imported into North America during the mid 1950’s as a substitute for linseed
  oil.               The
  oil is from the hard-shelled seeds of Aleurites moluccana, native to Malaya and
  Pacific Islands.  In the Philippines
  it is called lumbang oil.  It is a
  good drying oil and has been used in making paints, varnishes, lacquer,
  linoleum and soft soap and as a preservative for the hulls of ships.  The nuts were at one time used in Hawaii
  and other Polynesian islands for illumination, thus the name candlenut.  The oil cake is poisonous and may be used
  only as a fertilizer.               The mature and old kernels of English
  walnut, Juglans regia, and yield a drying oil used for white paint, artist paints,
  printing ink and soap.  Hot-pressed
  oil is adapted for these purposes. 
  The fresh oil and cold-pressed oil have a pleasant odor and nutty
  flavor and are edible.  Waste kernels
  from the shelling process may be used as a source of the oil.                This oil is pale yellow and comes
  from the seeds of Guizotia abyssinica, an annual plant in
  tropical Africa.  It is cultivated in
  India, Africa, Germany and the West Indies. 
  Higher grades have a pleasant aromatic odor and are used for food,
  while poorer grades are made into soak or serve as illuminants.  There has never been a widespread use of
  this oil in the Western Hemisphere.               Seeds of the poppy, Papaver somniferum, provides an important
  drying oil.  This drug plant is grown
  for its edible seeds in northern France and Germany and in India.  The first pressing yields white edible
  oil, while a second hot pressing furnishes reddish oil used for lamps, soap
  and, after bleaching, for oil paints.               Safflower,
  Carthamus tinctorius, is the source as a dye as well as oil from its seeds.  It is extensively cultivated in Egypt,
  India and the Orient and somewhat in North America.  It is widely used in Mexico.   Uses include manufacture of paints, soap, varnishes, illuminant
  and edible oil.   <bot692> 
  Safflower 
  (Carthamus tinctorius) [Mediterranean]               This is really not true oil but a byproduct of the
  sulfate pulp industry.  The waste
  liquor from pine pulp mills is concentrated by evaporation, and the soap
  curds are removed and acidified. 
  Crude tall oil, which results, contains fatty acids, resins and other
  substances.  It is refined by steam distillation.  It is used in the manufacture of soap and,
  after treatment with glycerin, as a drying oil.               Drying oils may be obtained from
  many other plant species, some of which have commercial importance.  Among them is hemp, Cannabis
  sativa,
  grown in China, Japan and Europe and the oil is extracted from seeds.  It is used for soap, paints, varnishes and
  lamp oil.  The seeds of tobacco, Nicotiana
  tabacum,
  Hevea
  brasiliensis, Manihot glazovii
  and
  other sources of rubber furnish oil as well as grapes and raisins.  Grape-seed oil in particular has become
  popular in California as a food product.              The most important of the semidrying
  oils, cottonseed oil is used as the standard of comparison.  The United States has been the main
  producer, but almost all the cotton-growing nations provide varying
  amounts.  Over one billion pounds of
  the oil were expressed annually in the United States by the mid 1950’s.  The industry was first established around 1880,
  prior to which cottonseeds were merely discarded.  The seeds are carefully cleaned and freed from impurities and
  the linters and usually the hulls are removed.  The kernels are then crushed and heated and are finally
  subjected to hydraulic pressure or expeller presses.  The oil is pumped into tanks where
  impurities settle out.  The pure
  refined oil is of value as a salad and cooking oil and for making margarine
  and lard substitutes.  The residue is
  the source of various products that have a wide range of industrial
  uses.  Among these are soap, oilcloth,
  washing powders, artificial leather, roofing tar, insulating materials,
  putty, glycerin and nitroglycerin. 
  Cottonseed meal is important as a food for animals and as a
  fertilizer.               There is about 50 percent oil
  located in the embryo of maize kernels. 
  It is used for a wide variety of purposes.  Refined oil is for human consumption either directly or in margarines,
  while the crude oil has industrial uses such as the manufacture of rubber
  substitutes, paints, soaps.  Corn oil
  has little lubricating value.               Also known as gingelly oil, sesame
  oil is the product of seeds of an annual herb, Sesamum
  indicum.  It has been a chief oil of India and was
  cultivated there and in China from ancient times.  Its use has spread to other tropical regions and it is now
  grown in many Asiatic, African and tropical American countries.  China produces about one-half of the world
  supply, India one-third and Africa and America the rest.  Slaves brought sesame oil to North
  America, and in the southern United States the plant was grown in slave days.             The seeds contain about 50 percent
  oil that is easily extracted by cold pressure.  The finer grades are tasteless and nearly colorless and are
  used as a substitute for olive oil in cooking and in medicine. Enormous
  quantities of sesame oil are used in Europe in the manufacture of margarine
  and other foods.  Poorer grades of oil
  are used for soap, perfumery and rubber substitutes and sometimes as a
  lubricant.  In India the oil is used
  for anointing the body, as fuel for lamps and as food.  Oil cake is a good cattle feed, and sesame
  seeds are also used in confectionery and baking industries.                Common
  sunflower seeds, Helianthus annuus, contain 32-45 percent
  of light golden-yellow oil equal to olive oil in its medicinal and food
  value.  It is an excellent salad oil
  and is used in margarines and lard substitutes.  The seeds are a nutritious bird and poultry food, while the oil
  cake is excellent for livestock and the whole plant is often grown for
  silage.  The oil has semidrying
  properties rendering it useful in the varnish, paint and soap industries.  Its origins probably lie in South America
  but it is cultivated worldwide. 
  Rumania, Russia and Argentina are big producers of sunflower seeds,
  while increasing acreage is planted in North America.               Seeds
  of several species of Brassica, mainly B. campestris, B.
  napus (rape) and B. rapa, yield oils with characteristics that classify them as rape
  or colza oils.  The oil content is
  30-45 percent and expression or solvents extract the oil.  Rapeseeds have been widely cultivated in
  Europe, China, Japan and India.  The
  crude oil is edible when cold pressed and is used for greasing loaves of
  bread before baking.  It is used in
  lamps, in oiling wooden goods, in the manufacture of soap and rubber
  substitutes and for quenching or tempering steel plates.  The refined oil, or colza oil, is edible
  and it can be used as a lubricant for delicate machinery.               Other
  sources are camelina oil from
  Camelina sativa, which is grown in Europe for its seed and used for soap and
  as an illuminant; croton oil, a powerful drug that is treated under
  “Medicinal Plants;” and argemone oil from Argemone
  mexicana.  The seeds of many varieties of cultivated
  plants, such as pears, apricots, apples, peaches, cherries, plums, citrus,
  cereals, tomatoes, canteloupes, watermelons, pumpkins and black and white
  mustard also contain semidrying oils.   <bot787>  Red Coondoo  (Mimusops elengi L.) (fruit;
  dysentery treatment; perfumes; paint oil) [India]                 The
  fruits of the olive, Olea europaea, provide olive oil,
  and it is the most important of the nondrying oils.  The tree is a small evergreen cultivated principally in
  Mediterranean countries and to a lesser degree in South Africa, Australia,
  South America, Mexico and the United States. 
  The world production of olive oil has exceeded two billion pounds
  since the mid 1950’s, with Spain, Italy, Greece and Portugal the
  leaders.  Oils from the latter
  countries are believed superior in flavor to those from other areas.             The oil is squeezed from the pulp
  either by hand or mechanically.  The
  finest grades are obtained by the former method.  These oils are golden yellow, clear and limpid.  They are used chiefly as salad and cooking
  oils, in canning sardines and in medicine. 
  Inferior grades have a greenish tinge and are used for soap making and
  as lubricants.  The poorest grades are
  obtained by the use of solvents after several pressings.  Fully ripe olives give the largest
  yield.  Olive oil is one of the most
  important food oils as it will store for long periods and becomes rancid only
  when exposed to the air.  The oil cake
  is used for stock feed and as a substitute for humus in coil conditioning.   <bot423>  Wild Olive (Olea europaea)
  & Cypress trees (Cupressus sempervirens), central Greece   <bot477> 
  Wild olive trees (Olea sp.), central Kenya                 Seeds
  of the common peanut, Arachis hypogaea, originally from South
  America, provide peanut oil.  The
  plant was widely used by Amerindians in Peru and so highly regarded that gold
  replicas are found in the tombs.             The main producers are China,
  India, Africa, and the United States. 
  The seeds are shelled, cleaned and crushed, and both hydraulic presses
  and expellers express the oil.  The
  filtered and refined oil is edible and used as a salad oil, for cooking, for
  packing sardines, in making margarine and shortenings, and as an adulterant
  for olive oil.  Inferior grades are
  for soap making, lubricants, and illuminants.  The oil cake is an excellent livestock feed as it has higher
  protein content than any other similar product.  Peanut oil is in great demand in Europe where it is extracted
  with solvents as well as by expression. 
  Spanish peanuts are grown in the United States for oil production
  because they have higher oil content.               Seeds
  of Ricinus communis furnish versatile
  oil.  The plant is a coarse erect
  annual herb that is cultivated in both temperate and tropical regions.  In North America it is a favored
  ornamental plant but has been grown for its oil.  The characteristically marked seeds contain 35-55 percent of
  thick colorless or greenish oil that is obtained by expression or solvent
  extraction.  Caution is required in
  handling the plant which has poisonous qualities.             The chief use of castor oil used
  to be in medicine, where it acts as a purgative.  Presently most of the production is utilized in industry in the
  manufacture of over 25 different products. 
  It is water resistant and thus may be used for coating fabrics and for
  protective coverings for airplanes, insulation, food containers, firearms,
  etc.  It is an excellent lubricant
  especially for airplane engines.  When
  hydrated it is converted into a quick-drying oil used in paints and
  varnishes.  Caster oil may also be
  used in making soap, inks and plastics, for preserving leather and as an
  illuminant.  The leaves have
  insecticidal properties, while the stalks are a source of paper pulp and
  cellulose.  The oil cake or pomace is
  poisonous but makes and excellent fertilizer.               Of minor importance are kapok oil
  from the seeds of the kapok tree and used as a substitute for cottonseed oil;
  tea-seed oil from Camelia
  sasanqua,
  a valuable oil in China, Japan and Assam; and oil of ben from Moringa oleifera.  Nondrying oils are also obtained from
  almonds, pecans, filberts, pistachio, and pili nuts and from the flesh of
  avocados.                 Widely used fatty oil, coconut oil
  is obtained from the dried white interior of the seed of Cocos
  nucifera.  This oil is pail yellow or colorless and
  is solid below 74 deg. Fahrenheit. 
  Following harvest, the nut husks are removed and the interior split
  open and dried either by natural or fire heat.  The dried tissue, or copra, is then easily removed.  This is ground up and the oil
  expressed.  The cake is sometimes
  placed in a hydraulic press a second time, and still more oil is
  removed.  The yield is 65-70
  percent.  Fresh coconut meat can be
  pressed also giving a yield of 80 percent or more oil.  Refined coconut oil is edible and is now
  extensively used as a food product, such as a substitute for milk.  It is especially well adapted for the
  purpose of margarines because it is solid at room temperature.  It is used in candy industry and for
  making the highest quality soaps, cosmetics, salves shaving creams, shampoos,
  suntan lotions, etc.  It is used for
  marine soaps and also as an illuminant. 
  The cake is an excellent livestock feed.  Copra is produced in Ceylon, India, Polynesia, the Philippines
  and the West Indies.  Most of the oil
  is expressed in Europe, the United States and Japan, though Ceylon and India
  export large amounts also.  In the
  latter part of the 20th Century there has been a trend away from consuming
  coconut fat because of possible harmful effects from saturated fats.  However, a resumption of usage has
  occurred in the 21st Century following more scientific research on saturated
  fats.   <bot693>  Coconut opened husks (Cocos nucifera)
  [Malaya]               This is a white vegetable fat that
  is solid at room temperature and which is obtained from the seeds of the African
  oil palm, Elaeis guineensi, a tree of Western Africa.  It has been transported worldwide and is
  cultivated in Haiti, Brazil and Honduras, where it is called dende.    Oil palms are very productive, beginning
  to bear at the age of 5-6 years and reaching full bearing at 15.  They continue to bear until 60-70 years of
  age.  Each tree has 10 bunches of 200
  nuts a year.  The fibrous pulp of
  these fruit contains 30-70 percent fat. 
  The oil was obtained mainly by crude methods for years until newer methods
  were developed.  It is yellow-orange
  or brownish red in color.  Most of the
  supply has been from Sumatra, Java and Western Africa.  Palm oil is used in making soap and in the
  manufacture of tin plate, terne plate and cold reduced sheet steel.  The refined oil is used in margarine and
  vegetable shortenings.  It has also
  bee used as a fuel for diesel motors in Africa.  Health conscious people have refrained in consuming this fat
  because, like coconut, there may be harmful effects from saturated fats.   <bot694> 
  African Oil Palm fruit (Elaeis guineensis)
  [Africa]               This white and valuable oil is
  obtained from the kernel of the African oil palm, Elaeis guineensis.  It was extensively used in the margarine
  and candy industries because of its pleasant odor and nutty flavor.  It has also been used for making blycerin,
  soap, shampoos and candles.  Natives
  in West Africa express some oil for their own use, but most of the kernels
  are shipped overseas.  Palm-kernel
  cake is a good cattle feed.               During World War II when supplies
  of copra and palm oil were reduced, attention was directed to the rich
  sources in Brazil.  This included over
  500 species of palms, many of which are potential sources of oil.  Although not native to Brazil, both
  coconut and the African oil palm occur there in great abundance.  Additionally, several native species of
  palm have economic importance.  These
  include the babasu, cohune, lieuri, tucum and murumuru palms, all of which
  provide kernel oils.               The most important of the New
  World palm oils is obtained from the babassu palms, Orbignya
  martiana and O. oleifera.   These are magnificent trees 60 ft. in height
  with a vase-shaped crown of leaves. 
  Two to eight enormous clusters of fruit are produced, each weighing
  about 200 lbs. and containing from 200-600 fruits.  The outer portion of the fruit is a dense, tough fibrous
  husk.  This surrounds a thin mealy
  mesocarp and the nut, which has a thick very hard shell.  This industry was retarded when only hand
  labor was available to crack the nuts, but machines were developed that can
  exert 10,000-25,000 lb. pressure.  The
  nuts contain from 2-6 kernels with a 63-70 percent oil content.  Babassu oil is expressed from these
  kernels and when refined is used as a substitute for coconut oil.  It is also used in making bulletproof
  glass, lubricants, and explosives and as a fuel for Diesel engines.               Nuts of the cohune palm, Orbignya cohune, native to Central and
  South America, contain 40 percent of a firm yellow fat.  At one time there were over two million
  acres of this palm managed in British Honduras that yielded from 1,000-2,000
  nutts per tree.  Like the babassu, the
  nut is very hard to crack, but machinery has been developed.               The
  licuri or ouricuri palm, Syagrus coronata, occurs in dry areas
  of eastern Brazil.  It is important
  commercially as the source of a palm-kernel oil and also of a wax that occurs
  on the leaves.  The fruits resemble
  miniature coconuts.               The
  murumuru palm, Astrocaryum murumuru, is the main source of
  palm-kernel oil in the sate of Para,  Brazil. 
  The tucum palms, Astrocaryum tucuma and A. vulgare, or
  northern South America yield both a palm  kernel and a pulp oil and also a fiber of
  commercial value.     Vegetable
  Fats of Minor Importance               This is the white
  or yellowish fat with a chocolate odor and flavor that is expressed from the
  beans of the cacao or cocoa, Theobroma
  cacao,
  during the process of making cocoa. 
  It is firm at room temperature. 
  It is used mainly for making chocolate but also for cosmetics and in
  perfumery and medicine.               This is a thick white or yellow
  oil obtained from the seeds of several species of the genus Carapa and is used for soap
  and as an illuminant.  Natives in
  South America have used the oil from C. guianensis
  to
  grease their bodies and drive off insects. 
  Carapa moluccensis
  is a
  native of East Africa, India, Sri Lanka and the Moluccas               Seeds
  of Butyrospermum parkii from Africa provide
  shea butter.  It is a greenish-yellow
  fat with a pleasant odor and taste.  The
  fat is also used mixed with, or as a substitute for, cocoa butter in
  chocolate manufacture.  Inferior
  grades are used for soap and candles. 
  A large amount was exported to Europe in the 20th Century.               Two
  species of the genus Madhuca, M. indica and M. longifolia, are the source of
  various products in India.  They are
  best known as mowra fat, bassia fat, mahua butter of illipe butter.  The trees are both wild and cultivated.  The kernels contain 55-65 percent of soft
  yellow oil that is widely used locally for cooking and tallow.  Over 66 million pounds were exported to
  Europe for use as a margarine and chocolate fat and in soap manufacturing
  during the 1950’s.  The cake is not fit
  for food but is used as a fertilizer. 
  Madhuca butyracea is the source of a similar product, phulwara
  butter, also used locally.               This is a hard yellowish-green and
  brittle solid fat sometimes known as green butter.  It is obtained from Shorea aptera
  and
  some other species of the same or allied genera native to the East
  Indies.  The kernels contain 50-70
  percent fat.  They are dried and
  expressed by the local people for their own use or are exported to Europe for
  soap making and as a substitute for cocoa butter.               This occurs as a thick layer of
  hard white fat on the seeds of 
  Sapium sebiferum a tree from China.  It has been introduced worldwide including
  the southern United States.  After
  treatment the tallow is used in soap and candle making.  The seeds contain a drying oil that has
  some value.               Seeds
  of nutmeg, Myristica fragrans, and related species contain about 40
  percent of a yellow fat with the flavor and consistency of tallow.  Nutmegs hate are not suitable for use in
  the spice trade are roasted and powdered and the oil extracted between warm
  plates.  Several varieties of nutmeg
  butter have appeared in the market, all used for ointments or for
  candles.  Mace yields a similar
  material.               There are many other vegetable
  fats used locally.  Among these pongam
  oil from the seeds of Pongamia pinnata is used for
  illumination and medicine in India and Sri Lanka; macassar oil from the seeds
  of Schleichera oleosa, a soft
  yellowish-white fat in India, Sri Lanka and the East Indies for coking
  purposes, as a hair oil and for illumination; and ucuhuba and otoba butter
  obtained from species of Virola in northern South
  America.             Members of the Flacourtiaceae in
  Asia, Afric and South America have oily seeds that contain chaulmoogric and
  usually hydnocarpic acid.  The natives
  in treating skin diseases have used these oils.  The most important one, chaulmoogra oil, are discussed under Medicinal Plants               Waxes usually occur on the
  epidermis of leaves and fruits where they serve to prevent water loss through
  transpiration.  The impervious waxes
  are harder than fats and have a higher melting point.  They do not become rancid and are less
  easily hydrolyzed.  Chemically waxes
  are similar to fats, but they are esters of monohydric alcohols rather than
  glycerides.  Very few are of
  commercial importance.               Carnauba is
  the most important vegetable wax.  It
  occurs as exudations on the leaves of the wax palm, Copernica cerifera, native to Brazil and other areas in tropical South
  America.  The slender fan palm is
  called “Tree of Life” locally because almost all parts of the pant are
  useful.  The commercial supply of
  carnauba wax is obtained from wild trees in northeastern Brazil.  Young leaves are carefully gathered before
  they are fully open.  They are dried
  in the sun for several days until the wax has turned to a flourlike
  dust.  This is then removed by
  threshing.  It is then melted down in
  clay vessels, followed by straining, cooling and forming into cakes or broken
  into small pieces for shipment.  There
  are several grades.  The crude product
  is greenish-gray and very hard with a high melting point.               Carnauba wax
  is used in the manufacture of candles, soap, high-luster varnishes, paints,
  carbon paper, batteries, sound films, insulation, salves, ointments and
  previously phonograph records.             The
  trunk of Ceroxylon andicola of the Andean Region
  produces a similar wax, which has been used as a substitute.               Candelilla
  is from Euphorbia antisyphilitica, a low, light blue-green desert shrub of
  Texas, Mexico and Northern Central America. 
  The tiny leaves are quickly deciduous.  The wax exudes from pores and forms a thin film on the
  stems.  The amount produced increases
  during winter, so that the plants are collected in that season.  The principal source is from wild plants.  The wax is extracted by solvents or by
  boiling.  The crude material is white,
  but the refined product is a light tan color and has a sweetish odor.  Candelilla wax is softer, contains more
  resin and has a lower melting point than carnauba, and is therefore less
  valuable.  It has been used as an
  extender wax in a mixture with others. 
  Chemical treatment improves its quality, however.               Berries
  of the bayberry, Myrica pensylvanica, and the wax myrtle,
  M. cerifera, are both native to the eastern United States, and they are
  covered with a thick layer of wax. 
  The material is in reality a fat rather than a wax.  It is removed from the fruits by boiling
  in water and is used for candle and soap manufacture.               The
  leaves of the Cauassu, Calathea lutea, a tall herb of the
  lower Amazon region, are potentially an important source of a commercial
  wax.  The wax occurs on the underside
  of the large leaves.  Drying in the sun
  for only 2-3 hours is enough for the very thin scales to form, which are then
  removed by scraping.  New wax-yielding
  leaves are produced within a year, while it takes 8-10 years for carnauba
  leaves to be renewed.  Cauassu wax is
  similar to carnauba and can be used for the same purposes.               Jojoba
  is an evergreen bush, Simmondsia chinensis, of semiarid regions
  on the southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico.  it is unique in having seeds with a 50
  percent liquid wax content.  This wax
  is suitable for polishes, candles and as a substitute for whale oil.  It is also useful as an illuminant and,
  after processing, for several types of foods.  The oil cake is an excellent livestock feed and the acornlike
  fruits are edible.  Cultivation of
  jojoba increased dramatically in the United States during the latter part of
  the 20th Century, but has declined thereafter.   <bot695>  Jojoba  (Simmondsia chinensis) [North
  America]               Berries of the wax tree of Japan, Rhus
  succedanea,
  and the leaves of raphia and licuri palms, sugar cane and esparto may also
  furnish commercial wax.   <bot766> 
  Rambutan (Nephelium lappaceum L.) (fruit;
  oil for candles) [Malaysia]               Many plants
  contain natural products that can serve as substitutes for soap.  These are the saponins, a group of
  water-soluble glucosides.  Such plants
  yield soap froth in water that forms emulsions with fats and oils and are
  capable of absorbing large amounts of gases such as carbon dioxide.  Besides the few that are commercial
  important, there are many wild species that have been used locally.  The most important saponin-containing
  plants are the following:              
  Quillaja saponaria,
  the soapbark tree,
  grows on the western slopes of the Andes from Peru to Chile.  The commercial material is derived from
  dried inner bark, which is removed after the outer bark has been shaved
  off.  The saponin content of the bark
  is about 9 percent.  Soapbark forms a
  copious lather in water and is used in washing delicate fabrics.  It was one of the best emergency materials
  for cleaning lenses and precision instruments during World War II.  In medicine it has been used as an expectorant
  and emulsifying agent.  However, it is
  a dangerous drug to take internally. 
  Being very toxic it tends to dissolve the blood corpuscles.  Therefore, its use to increase the foaming
  power of beer and other beverages is discouraged.  Soapbark is also a good coetaneous stimulant and is often used
  in hair tonics.               Saponaria
  officinalis is a plant native to Eurasia but has become
  naturalized in North America. It contains a considerable amount of
  saponin.  When placed in water the leaves
  produce a lather, which is utilized for washing silks and woolens.  It not only cleanses but imparts a luster
  as well.               These are fruits of a tropical
  American tree, Sapindus saponaria, that occur as several subspecies from
  South Texas south. They are used as soap substitutes and in the preparation
  of hair tonics.                 Bulbs of the California soaproot, Chlorogalum
  pomeridianum,
  yield a good lather and have been used locally to wash fabrics.   |